Hi, I'm making updates for Open Collective. Either you or a supporter signed this repo up for Open Collective. This pull request adds backers and sponsors from your Open Collective https://opencollective.com/jekyll❤️
It adds two badges at the top to show the latest number of backers and sponsors. It also adds placeholders so that the avatar/logo of new backers/sponsors can automatically be shown without having to update your README.md. [more info](https://github.com/opencollective/opencollective/wiki/Github-banner). See how it looks on this [repo](https://github.com/apex/apex#backers).
You can also add a postinstall script to let people know after npm|yarn install that you are welcoming donations (optional). [More info](https://github.com/OpenCollective/opencollective-cli)
You can also add a "Donate" button to your website and automatically show your backers and sponsors there with our widgets. Have a look here: https://opencollective.com/widgets
P.S: As with any pull request, feel free to comment or suggest changes. The only thing "required" are the placeholders on the README because we believe it's important to acknowledge the people in your community that are contributing (financially or with code!).
Thank you for your great contribution to the open source community. You are awesome! 🙌
And welcome to the open collective community! 😊
Come chat with us in the #opensource channel on https://slack.opencollective.com - great place to ask questions and share best practices with other open source sustainers!
By now, I have almost entirely rewritten Jekyll with the help of our awesome
contributors. Taking a look at the contributions graphs GitHub provides,
I have to date pushed 1,452 commits to master with 24,991 additions and
17,330 deletions. In contrast, Tom Preston-Werner has pushed 295 commits
and 13,461 additions and 6,806 deletions. I don't need to have my name all
over it, but I think I have worked hard enough over the last 21 months
to deserve to put my name alongside Tom's and Nick's.
The lovely thing about version control is that changes can always be reverted.
Thanks for launching this great product, @mojombo and @qrush. I hope I haven't
let you down.